Rene Rivera tracked down several issues related to
Code Warrior, toolset configuration and bjam and much else.

Martin Ecker detected (and fixed!) a number of sublte errors regarding cyclic
pointers, shared pointers. He also built the library as a DLL and raised some issues

Pavel Vozenilek invested much effort in review of code and documentation
resulting in many improvements. In addition he help a lot with porting to other
platforms including VC 6.0, Intel, and especially Borland.

Jens Maurer and
Beman Dawes who got the boost
serialization ball rolling. It was one or both of these two that invented
the much beloved & syntax used to implement both save and
load in one fuction specification.

Vladimir Prus for evaluating an
early draft and contributing the diamond inheritance example.

William E. Kempf
who made the templates for this and other boost manuals. This relieved
me of much aggravation.

all boost members who participated in the first formal review
in November 2002. Many of these members invested quite an effort
to evaluate the library and suggest changes. They are
Matthias Troyer, Pavel Vozenilek, Vladimir Prus, Fredrik Blomqvist,
Jeff Garland, Gennadiy Rozental, Alberto Barbati, Dave Harris.
Mr. Rozenthal in particular wrote an incredibly insightful analysis
that has driven all subsequent development that has resulted in the
current package.

Dave Harris proposal and spirited defense of it lead to a re-thinking
of the overrides for serialization of pointers. This resulted in a simpler
and more effective method of accounting for non-default constructors
required by serialization of pointers and STL collections.